Exposure-Corrected, Neutral, Portrait Reframe**

Use the provided images as strict photographic reference. The first image is the primary reference, defining camera position, perspective, lens look, aperture behavior, lighting direction, and overall exposure intent. Additional images are secondary and used only to confirm object placement and materials. Do not blend viewpoints.

All reference images are landscape. Generate one portrait image (9:16) by reframing vertically, as if originally captured in portrait orientation by the same real-estate photographer.

Primary Goal

Reframe the scene and correct exposure issues while preserving the original lighting feel. The room must remain bright, clean, neutral, and well-lit, but more professionally exposed than the source.

Exposure & Highlight Correction (Very Important)

Actively correct overexposed areas

Reduce blown-out highlights on:

Windows

Sunlit walls

Ceilings

Bright surfaces

Restore or reconstruct missing highlight detail, even if the original photo lacks it

Highlight reconstruction must look natural and photographic, not artificial

Daylight should remain bright and inviting, but never clipped or harsh.

Contrast & Shadow Control

Do not increase global or local contrast

Do not deepen shadows to compensate for highlight recovery

Do not add mood, drama, or cinematic lighting

Shadows should remain soft, light, and natural